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Author of 77 Stories |
Daley finds her bed blindly, tripping almost over carpet. The mattress sinks underneath her, actually bends to fit her frame, welcomes her. Plush sheets and warm quilt both smell as amazing as they feel -- inviting, placating. And Daley should shift instantly to sleep, because she's home and it's a miracle and it seems like she's been wide awake for twenty-eight whole days, and now, she can rest, at peace.
She wakes up at three-fifteen, sweating, from a dream about lizards and oysters, wild pigs and flares, confused when she's comfortable and can't hear the beat of the ocean on the shore.
She just can't shake the feeling that something is wrong, that water doesn't come from a tap and should be boiled first. She shakes the faulty logic, ends her inner debate, and picks up the glass. It's still cold and she's mesmorized, convinces herself to take the first sip. And it doesn't sting of salt and it's free of tiny sand grains and it's just water, water as she's always known it, but she still finds it hard to swallow.
And then she starts scrubbing, first with her loofa, because she can feel the sand. It's her sixth shower since she's been home, yet she still swears it's everywhere: in between strands of her hair, buried in the curves of her limbs, deep in the dip of her collarbones and earlobes and wedged in between her toes. It's all-encompassing, unshakable, and she'll stand there til the water goes cold, having moved to a washcloth and finally, her fingernails.
He's been waiting twenty eight days for this and it's lackluster. He finds himself unable to focus, frustrated, desettled. It's television all right, but it pales in comparison to storms and wild pigs and smoke signals and he hates to admit it. He doesn't really want to be back on the island: starving and sleep-deprived, hot and dirty, but he sure as hell doesn't want to be here, parked in front of this obnoxious television set.
There is a metallic thud as it hits the rim, bounces in. The shot was ugly but good enough, and the ball bounces down his driveway and he watches it as it continues his path straight into the street. He thinks about Newton's laws and starts to chase it: simple physics, simple simple basketball. And Nathan feels like he's all of eight years old, chasing a basketball of all trivial things, reciting school lessons like a good boy.
And Jackson, oh, Jackson is face to face with a quarter pounder. Melting cheese droops over the side, lettuce squarely sticks out underneath the steaming brown bun. And the smell, oh my God, the smell: it's bizarre and amazing and Jackson's hands are itching. He never wants to see a coconut again but rather sink his teeth straight into the warm, juicy burger -- and so, he does.
Chewing mechanically, grimacing all the while, as his waiter watches -- an old man, whose seen him come in to order the exact same meal three nights in the last week. The first time, the waiter had cleaned up Jackson's vomit from the bathroom floor after he scarfed the mess down; the second, he had watched Jackson deconstruct the various pieces of the burger, picking it apart, making a horrible mess to not eat a bite; now, he watches Jackson chew slowly, deliberately, and doesn't question it.
post notes: um, hi. it has been a while since i wrote 'fic (or, well, anything) and i'm immensely surprised it was for this fandom. :) anyway, this wasn't my best, obviously, but i am pleased with it; they start pretty short and ended longer, i don't really know. um, voice is kindof strange, this whole thing is kindof strange, i just am curious about what happens when you come home from that. and i never saw the whole rescue episode, so if i have some horrendous discontinunity, i apologize. i also apologize for no lex. or spelling errors. i would really, truly, epically adore reviews. considering it feels like years since i've gotten feedback. oh, yeah, it kindof has. ha.